Responsibility
It sounds like we're saying the same thing. The brain considers the alternatives and decides to hand over the wallet rather than being shot. It does have to do with will precisely as you said, the 'part that will plays being the prompts or urges to act, to reach for your wallet, to say ''Here, I don't want any trouble.'' '
Because you were coerced into handing over your wallet, no one will hold you responsible for losing the money. They will hold the robber responsible for your loss. The specific "will", your brain came up with under coercion, was "I will hand over my wallet".
Responsibility depends on brain condition and the ability to reason rationally, not will. Will is the result of the brains functionality and ability to reason, not its driver.
Whenever the brain's choosing function is invoked, the person's will is the outcome of the function. We choose what we will do.
Responsibility is assigned to the most meaningful and relevant
cause of the behavior.
If the behavior was coerced, then the guy with the gun is held responsible, and he is arrested and put in a correctional facility.
If the behavior was due to insanity, then the mental illness is held responsible for the behavior, and the patient is treated medically and psychiatrically.
If the behavior was due to a sane adult's deliberate choice to commit a criminal act for his own personal benefit at the expense of others, then that person is held responsible for his own behavior. He is arrested, imprisoned in a correctional facility, and given the opportunity for rehabilitation through counseling and education designed to
correct the way he thinks about such matters in the future, so that he will make better choices of his own free will.
In all three of these cases,
responsibility is assigned to the most meaningful and relevant cause of the behavior, and that cause is subject to correction.
That's how responsibility works.
Someone may be intelligent, able to reason, but is constantly making bad decisions.
Well, as long as those decisions do not harm others, he is free to make bad decisions, and hopefully, over time, learn to make better ones. Thomas Edison made many unsuccessful choices before he came up with a working light bulb. Sometimes it is just a matter of trial and error.
A computer is able to make rational decisions/selections based on sets of criteria, therefore able to choose what is considered good and moral.
Not quite. A computer is a tool we create to do our will. It has no will of its own. Whether the computer can output a "good" or "moral" choice will be governed by the criteria that we program into it. The logic is ours, the will is ours. The computer has no skin in the game.
It is the system, not its impulses or its will that selects the only option it has available to it in any given instance in time (determinism).
The
system IS
us, specifically our own brain. Whatever the system decides, we have decided. There is no dualism. There is no "pitting us against our own brains".
Oh, and of course, whenever choosing occurs, there are always at least two real options available. There is no such thing as "choosing between a single possibility".
We are judged on the basis of our decision making ability (being of sound mind or not), not our will.
We are judged upon our behavior. The most meaningful and relevant cause of that behavior is held responsible. (see Responsibility above).
The perception of decision making.
''Recognizing that consciousness is awareness does change the way we can look at the fundamental problem of free will. Free will is more correctly defined as “the perception that we choose to make movements.” Looking at it in this way produces at least two possibilities. The first is that there is a process of free will, an aspect of consciousness, that does choose to make a specific movement. The second is that the brain’s motor system produces a movement as a product of its different inputs, consciousness is informed of this movement, and it is perceived as being freely chosen
And what do we mean by "it is perceived as being freely chosen"? Do we perceive our choice to be made
randomly or as an
uncaused event? No, we perceive our choice to be reliably caused by our own reasoning. If the behavior were random then it would be unpredictable, and people would question our sanity. We perceive our choice to be
reliably caused by our own purposes and reasons. So, our perception is that our choice is reliably caused (deterministic), and that we are the most meaningful and relevant cause (free will).
Whether the choosing operation is an "an aspect of consciousness" or not is irrelevant. Our only way to explain and explore our deliberate choices is by conscious processes involving awareness, language, inference, and reportable information.
Deliberation involves conscious awareness. But there are also reflex behaviors, decisions programmed into the spinal neurons for quick response. And there are also autonomic behaviors, like breathing heavily after a run. And there are also habitual behaviors, based on choices made long ago that we never give any thought to unless something unexpected happens.
Necessity:
''Necessity is the idea that everything that has ever happened and ever will happen is necessary, and can not be otherwise. Necessity is often opposed to chance and contingency. In a necessary world there is no chance. Everything that happens is necessitated.''
Again, the author of the quote is misusing the word "can", conflating it with "will". And every sentence following the first sentence confirms this! The word "can" is used in the context of uncertainty, and tells us that we are in that context, and not in a context of certainty. If something "can" happen, then it may happen, or, then again it may never happen. So let's look at the following three sentences:
1. "Necessity is often opposed to chance and contingency." So, necessity is about certainty, there are no "if's" in necessity, there are no events that "may or may not happen". There are only events that
will certainly happen.
2. "In a necessary world there is no chance." But the word "can" denotes chances. If something "can" happen, then there is a "chance" that it will happen, and an equal chance that it will not happen.
3. "Everything that happens is necessitated." There are no events that "cannot" happen. All of the necessitated events
will certainly happen.
When speaking of necessity, we are not speaking of uncertainties. We are not speaking as to what things "can" or "cannot" happen. We are only speaking of what "will" certainly happen. Thus, the words "can" and "cannot" must not appear in our definition of necessity.
Necessity means that everything that will happen is reliably caused by other events that definitely did happen. Necessity has nothing to say about what "can" or "cannot' happen. It must remain silent on that subject. There are no "chances", no "contingencies", and no "possibilities"
in the context of certainty.
As soon as any word appears that logically implies a context of uncertainty, we are shifted back into that context, and all our various alternatives and multiple possibilities and things that can or cannot happen are restored within that context.